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What the Average American Gets From Social Security

Find out how some types of benefits pay more than others.

At last count, nearly 62.4 million people received Social Security benefits. The program pays out close to $1 trillion annually in benefits, and although the bulk of that total goes to retired workers, there's a host of different benefits available to workers and their family members both in retirement and during the earlier part of their lives.

The typical American receiving Social Security gets an average monthly benefit of $1,294, according to the Social Security Administration. But the benefit amounts can vary widely depending on the type of benefit you're talking about, as different rules apply for various categories of people entitled to receive financial assistance from Social Security.

Average benefits for Social Security recipients

Benefit Category

Average Monthly Benefit

Overall

$1,294

Retired workers

$1,411

Spouses of retired workers

$736

Surviving spouses of deceased workers (nondisabled)

$1,343

Surviving children of deceased workers

$861

Disabled workers

$1,198

Spouses of disabled workers

$336

Children of disabled workers

$369

Data source: SSA, as of April 2018.

The most common Social Security benefits

The vast majority of people getting Social Security are retired workers claiming benefits on their own work histories. Because of the demographic shift in recent decades toward two-earner families, it's increasingly common among married couples for both spouses to collect their own benefits.

Even when there's an earnings disparity between two spouses, the progressive nature of the formula that determines monthly Social Security benefits often makes a worker's own retirement benefit worth more than the spousal benefit based on the work record of the person's spouse. That's largely because the spousal benefit is typically one-half of the worker benefit. In fact, you can see that dynamic in the averages above, because the typical spousal benefit of is just over half what the typical retired worker makes.

Image source: Getty Images.

Disability and survivor benefits

The next two biggest categories are disabled worker benefits and survivor benefits. Disability benefits tend to be slightly lower than retirement benefits, and that's due in part to the way that Social Security calculates the benefit amount for those who are disabled.

The SSA doesn't require a 35-year work history for disability benefits, as that would lead to young workers who are disabled early in their careers getting next to nothing from the program. Yet even with that as a given, most workers tend to have their highest earnings late in their careers, so missing out on those years due to an earlier disability skews earnings enough to result in lower benefits. For the families of disabled workers, the fact that more children of younger disabled workers will be young enough to be eligible for children's benefits goes a long way toward explaining the low payouts there, because family maximum benefit limitations often require larger numbers of children to share a maximum benefit rather than earning what would otherwise be the full amount.

It also should come as little surprise to see that surviving spouses get an amount that's very close to what retired workers get. In general, surviving spouses are entitled to survivor benefits that are equal to the benefit that their deceased spouses had earned, adjusted for the age at which the survivor chooses to claim those benefits. Children's amounts are lower, as they're entitled to just 75% of the worker's benefit as a survivor benefit, and family maximums can end up reducing their benefits, as well.

Make the most of your Social Security benefits

Just because the average American earns the amounts above from Social Security doesn't mean you can't do better. There are several ways you can boost your benefit entitlement:

Improve your earnings history by working a full 35-year career. Working even longer than 35 years can help if you can out-earn the early years of your career, even after adjusting for inflation.

Wait longer before claiming your retirement benefit. Those who claim at age 70 can get as much as 75% larger monthly payments than they would if they claimed at 62.

Be smart about coordinating benefits. If you're entitled both to worker benefits and to either spousal or survivor benefits, you can sometimes get extra money by timing when you claim either or both sets of payments.

Social Security helps tens of millions of Americans, and the money it provides is vital to their financial stability. Understanding the basics of how Social Security benefits work is important if you want to get as much as you can from the program throughout your lifetime.

Author

Dan Caplinger has been a contract writer for the Motley Fool since 2006. As the Fool's Director of Investment Planning, Dan oversees much of the personal-finance and investment-planning content published daily on Fool.com. With a background as an estate-planning attorney and independent financial consultant, Dan's articles are based on more than 20 years of experience from all angles of the financial world.
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